A former head of spot currency trading at BNP Paribas is claiming the French bank dismissed him for whistleblowing, according to a court filing. BNP declined to comment. (Reuters)

World anti-doping watchdogs suspended the lab set to handle drug testing during the Rio Olympics. Meanwhile, Russian athletics authorities will back individual lawsuits by athletes against the IAAF. (NY Times, TASS)

New York prosecutors resumed their insider-trading crackdown after a setback had short-circuited their efforts. (Reuters)

Indian non-profits are nervous about an anti-bribery law soon to capture them. (PTI)

Indonesia’s KPK is investigating a court official in a bribery case; he didn’t appear to be contacted. (Jakarta Post)

Peter Henning elaborates here on how the Supreme Court boosted the U.S. case against FIFA. (NY Times)

Brazil’s interim president was named in new bribery allegations. His office hasn’t commented. (Upstream)

Shares of Hypermarcas, the largest Brazilian producer of generic drugs, plunged on reports that a former senior executive admitted paying bribes to ruling coalition politicians. The former executive couldn’t be reached; the company said it isn’t a target in an investigation. (Reuters)

Other winners in the McDonnell Supreme Court decision include defense lawyers and a convicted New Orleans politician. Officials were notably quiet in the wake of the decision. (Law.com, Times-Picayune Atlantic)